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The Satyricon — Complete cover

The Satyricon — Complete

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About This Book

A fragmentary satirical prose narrative follows a group of companions through episodic misadventures that include erotic entanglements, feasts, legal quarrels, and comic violence. A famous, digressive banquet episode skewers ostentation and social climbing, while other incidents expose hypocrisy and decadence through earthy slang and vivid realism. The surviving text alternates polished rhetoric with coarse colloquialism, shifts between comedy and moral critique, and contains gaps and later interpolations that unsettle chronological unity. Together the episodes juxtapose sensory detail, social satire, and narrative fragmentation to evoke a bawdy, ambiguous world of manners and excess.

About the Author

Arbiter, Petronius portrait

Petronius Arbiter

Petronius Arbiter was a Roman courtier and satirist, best known for his work "The Satyricon," a unique blend of prose and poetry that offers a vivid portrayal of Roman society during the first century AD. Often regarded as one of the earliest novels, "The Satyricon" explores themes of decadence, social satire, and the complexities of human relationships through the adventures of its protagonist, Encolpius. Petronius's sharp wit and keen observations provide insight into the cultural and moral landscape of his time, making his work a significant contribution to classical literature and an enduring influence on later literary traditions.

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